Leslie M. Shaw (Republican) 51.27% Frederick Edward White (Democratic)[a] 44.46% S. P. Leland (Prohibition) 1.88% Charles A. Lloyd (Midroad-Populist) 1.21% John Cliggett (National Democratic) 0.98% M. J. Kremer (Socialist Labor) 0.20% [1]
George F. Williams (Democratic) 29.49% William Everett (National Democratic) 5.14% Thomas C. Brophy (Socialist Labor) 2.34% John A. Bascom (Prohibition) 1.83% Scattering 0.01% [2]
Horace L. Chapman (Democratic) 46.99% John C. Holiday (Prohibition) 0.88% Jacob S. Coxey Sr. (Populist) 0.73% William Watkins (Socialist Labor) 0.50% John Richardson (Liberty) 0.36% Julius Dexter (National Democratic) 0.19% Samuel J. Lewis (Negro Protection) 0.06% [3]
Elisha Dyer Jr. (Republican) 58.11% Daniel T. Church (Democratic) 32.69% Thomas H. Peabody (Prohibition) 5.01% Franklin E. Burton (Socialist Labor) 3.31% John H. Larry (National Liberty) 0.88% [4]
James Hoge Tyler (Democratic) 64.43% Patrick H. McCaull (Republican) 33.40% L. A. Cutler (Prohibition) 1.61% John J. Quantz (Socialist Labor) 0.31% James Seldon Cowden (Independent) 0.24% [5][6]
^White ran under a fusion ticket between the Democrats, the Populists, and the Silver Republican Party
Bibliography
Glashan, Roy R. (1979). American Governors and Gubernatorial Elections, 1775-1978. Meckler Books. ISBN0-930466-17-9.
Gubernatorial Elections, 1787-1997. Washington, D.C.: Congressional Quarterly Inc. 1998. ISBN1-56802-396-0.
Dubin, Michael J. (2014). United States Gubernatorial Elections, 1861-1911: The Official Results by State and County. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland. ISBN978-0-7864-4722-0.